← Back to Home

#publishing

3 incidents tagged

Mild

Death of Frederick Lillywhite — End of an Era for Cricket Publishing, 1866

n/a

1866-09-15

Frederick William Lillywhite, the cricket publisher who had founded the The Guide to Cricketers in 1849 and the encyclopaedic Scores and Biographies in 1862, died at Brighton on 15 September 1866 aged just 37. His death scattered the Lillywhite publishing operation among rival relatives, removed the only direct competitor to John Wisden's three-year-old Almanack, and turned Wisden from one cricket annual among many into the inheritor of the field.

#fred-lillywhite#lillywhite-guide#publishing
Mild

John Wisden Publishes the First Cricketers' Almanack — Spring 1864

n/a

1864-04-01

Retired Sussex bowler John Wisden, proprietor of a sports outfitters in Cranbourn Street, brought out the first edition of The Cricketer's Almanack in the spring of 1864. The 112-page shilling pamphlet, padded with the dates of the English Civil War and the winners of the St Leger, was a competitor to Fred Lillywhite's existing Guide and would grow into the longest-running sports annual in history.

#wisden#john-wisden#almanack
Mild

John Nyren's *The Young Cricketer's Tutor* — First Major Cricket Book, 1833

n/a

1833-04-01

In April 1833 the publisher Effingham Wilson of the Royal Exchange brought out *The Young Cricketer's Tutor*, written by the elderly Hambledon player John Nyren and edited by his friend Charles Cowden Clarke. The slim duodecimo combined a manual of technique with a memoir of the great Hambledon men of the 1770s and 1780s and is generally regarded as the first significant book in cricket literature.

#john-nyren#young-cricketers-tutor#charles-cowden-clarke